If you missed Part One, CLICK HERE. Here’s Part Two.
30. “I treated you like a son.”
31. “I wasn’t made to play the son.”
To Rajon Rondo, if only because this sounds like something he’d say to Doc Rivers. I have spent as much time trying to figure out Rondo these last few years as either of my kids. He’s like a cat: Sometimes he jumps on your lap, sometimes you don’t see him for days, sometimes he goes down in the basement and kills mice for you, sometimes he’s kicking over his own kitty litter box, sometimes he’s inexplicably beating up a poodle, sometimes he’s hissing at your children you just never know. The good thing about him: You always know in the first quarter. Did we get Good Rondo today? YES! We got Good Rondo! And lemme tell you something: Boston isn’t beating Miami unless Good Rondo shows up four times. At least.
32. “Mr. Little, how does a man rob drug dealers for 8 or 9 years and live to tell about it?”
33. “Day at a time, I suppose.”
To Carlos Boozer, Chicago’s big free-agent catch who seems to be gaining “Carlos Boozer’s 2015 Expiring Contract” potential as the postseason drags along. I don’t want to overreact except to say that we’re going to need more rebounding, more 15-footers and more chest hair and soon. Besides, this isn’t the Summer of 2010 mistake that’s haunting the Bulls.
34. ”I admire a man with confidence.”
35. “I don’t see no sweat in your brow either, bro.”
To Ray Allen, who nailed so many big shots for Boston in four years that it’s reached “even if you know we’re running this double-screen for him, we’re doing it anyway,” status and he’s still as reliable as anyone. If Chicago doesn’t win the 2011 title, it will be because they didn’t overwhelm Allen with a three-year, $40 million offer last summer. In their defense, I think they thought they were a year away — they never expected Rose to make The Leap that soon. But why pursue a J.J. Redick/Kyle Korver tandem for the same money that it would have taken to get Ray?
Clearly, they read the tea leaves: Barring injury, Ray should remain at this level until he’s 38 or 39. One of my favorite parts of this year’s “The Association” was learning more about Ray’s preparation — how early he gets to the arena, where he shoots on the floor, how much thought he puts into everything — and coming away thinking, “Wait, this guy is kind of a lunatic!” And I mean that in the nicest way possible — he wouldn’t waver from his routine for anything, not even if it meant shooting 3s at 4:00 while they were still putting down the floor, or trying to get his drills done as a cheerleading squad practiced 20 feet away. He did everything short of shooting jumpers while muttering “15 minutes until Wapner, 15 minutes until Wapner” or counting 250 toothpicks that just dropped on the floor. As recently as last year, arguing “Reggie Miller versus Ray Allen” was as fun as arguing “The Sopranos” versus “The Wire” — you could make compelling cases for each side, even if the Reggie/Sopranos backers were arguing with their hearts and not their heads (and romanticizing certain things about the player/show that became distorted narratives over time). After Allen’s 2010-11 season? There is no more debate.
36. “All Perk can do is foul me. He’s too slow. I don’t think nobody in the league can stop me. Not only Perk. I tell Perk to his face. I already told him before.”
Whoops, that wasn’t from “The Wire” — that’s what Z-Bo said after Game 1 against Oklahoma City. As if we didn’t have enough of a reason to be excited about that series — now here’s Z-Bo trying to make Kendrick Perkins’ scowl actually explode like a grenade.
36. “You are a parasite who leeches off the culture of drugs.”
37. “Just like you, man.”
38. “Excuse me, what?”
39. “I got the shotgun. You got the briefcase. It’s all in the game though, right?”
One of the best chess moves of the series (Omar turning the tables on a lawyer in court) goes to the best chess move of Round 1: Atlanta’s Larry Drew adopting Boston’s defensive tactic of “Knock yourself out, Dwight, score as many points as you want, we’re singling you and making sure nobody else gets an open jump shot” and daring Howard to put up 50-20s to beat them. It threw Orlando off its game and exposed how pedestrian their 2-through-12 guys are and by the way, had anyone tried this with Shaq from 2000 to 2002, he would have averaged 50 a game, so Howard’s legacy took a small hit even as he was throwing up 35-15s. If the other team’s game plan is “Get yours, knock yourself out,” that has to mean something. Right?
40. “I’m Proposition Joe. You f**k with me, I’ll kill your whole family.”
To David Stern, who might have to work all his magic to prevent the following ABC commercial: “Randolph! Horford!!!!!! It’s the Grizzlies and the Hawks, Game 1 of the 2011 Finals, June 2 on ABC!”
(And you know what? Even though it’s totally far-fetched, it’s not that far-fetched: The Grizzlies are playing better than anyone in the West; the Hawks are threatening to become the first team that ever quit on its coach in the regular season, then forgot they quit once the playoffs started; and if the Bulls continue to look like a regular-season mirage, and Miami and Boston wear each other out, who the heck knows what will happen? For the record, I’m not willing to give up on the Bulls — they remind me of the 2008 Celtics in that they played the regular season in fifth gear, now they’re trying to find that Fast and Furious NOS button for an extra burst. If you remember, it took the 2008 Celts two and a half rounds to find the NOS. I bet the Bulls find it. You wait. And yes, I’m making that prediction while being fully aware that their only crunch-time play right now is “Get out of Derrick’s way.”)
41. “My name was on the street? When we bounce from this sh*t here, y’all going to go down on them corners and let the people know: Word did not get back to me. Let them know Marlo step to any motherf**ker. Omar, Barksdale, whoever. My name is my name!!!”
To Dwyane Wade, who obviously got tired of hearing how well Boston played him and submitted a pantheon performance in Game 1: scoring at will and ending up with 38 points, chasing Ray Allen around dozens of screens, finding time to goad Paul Pierce into getting thrown out, even carrying himself with the same defiance that Marlo had after finding out that his name was on the street. Command of the room. That was Wade in Game 1. I continue to be most frightened of Miami when Wade is Michael Eisner and LeBron is Frank Wells.
42. “We gonna see who got the bigger war chest.”
To our first Dirk/Kobe playoff series ever. I have no idea how this never happened before — it’s like Rick Fox never having sex with one of the Kardashian sisters, it’s practically a statistical impossibility.
43. “You think I’m going down dontcha? You-you-you think I’m done. All you ungrateful bitches think you can throw me out of the boat.”
To the great Chris Paul, who left his knee brace behind, shifted from third to fifth gear and played two of the best games in the history of the point guard position (Game 1 and Game 4) against a superior Lakers team. I tweeted this before, I’ll say it again: We should be burning DVDs of those games and making them mandatory viewing for every aspiring point guard at every basketball camp. This is how you play the position: create good shots for other guys, keep them involved, keep them playing hard, keep motivating them, take care of the ball, make the right decision on every fast break, and when things break down, you need to take over and score yourself. He’s the evolutionary Isiah Thomas, the best pure point guard who ever played, and if you had to pick ONE special subplot of Round 1, it has to be this: Because of his knee issues, we didn’t know if Paul could get to this level anymore. Wrong.
44. “That’s my money.”
45. “Man, money ain’t got no owners. Only spenders.”
Another classic Omar quote (from when he robbed Marlo during a poker game) goes to Orlando GM Otis Smith. Hey Otis, do you realize you have $57 million committed to seven guys for the 2012-13 season, and none of those guys are Dwight Howard??? Do you want to work for TNT, NBA TV or ESPN that year? I’d start thinking about it now.
46. “That’s good. That’s like a 40-degree day. Ain’t nobody got nuttin to say about a 40-degree day. Fifty? Bring a smile to your face. Sixty? Sh*t, n****s are damn near barbecuing that motherf**ka. Go down to 20? N****s get they bitch on. Get they blood complainin’ … but 40? Nobody give a f**k about 40. Nobody remember 40, and y’all n****s is giving me way too many 40-degree days.”
One of the most colorful monologues in the show’s history (Stringer Bell yelling at his drug soldiers to step it up) goes to Phil Jackson, whose Lakers team is definitely giving him too many 40-degree days. It’s OK for a former champ to trust your on/off switch and wait until you feel that familiar wall against your back (the ’88 Lakers, ’95 Rockets and ’02 Lakers are three good examples), but once you start wearing that switch out, you never know when the wrong team can catch you like how the ’07 Cavaliers caught the Pistons, or how the ’11 Grizzlies caught the Spurs last week. That switch has a shelf life. These Lakers can beat the Mavs in 40-degree mode, but not the Grizzlies or Zombie Sonics (much less the best Eastern team).
Speaking of Stringer, here are three more reasons why “The Wire” was the greatest show ever: Not only did it shove the show’s lead (McNulty) into the background for an entire season, but it killed off the show’s single most compelling character (Stringer) with two seasons to go AND killed off everyone’s favorite character (Omar) halfway through its final season. It went against everything that’s ever worked in television history, but it also fit into the premise of the show: There were no winners in Baltimore, only survivors, and you never knew when your time was going to be up.
47. “Well it seem like I can’t say nuttin’ to change y’all minds.”
To the NBA, who made the same mistake it makes every year: using local announcing feeds in Round 1 over two professional, impartial announcers who may have called the game without cheering wildly for one of the two teams. For Game 2, the poor Grizzlies fans had to listen to Sean Elliott and his yahoo play-by-play partner cheer for the Spurs like Little League parents, repeatedly use the word “we,” and compare Ginobili’s return from an elbow injury to Willis Reed’s comeback in Game 7 of the 1970 Finals. All so the NBA could save a couple of grand in traveling expenses. Here’s an idea: Charge an extra quarter next year for the NBA Season pass, then spend that extra windfall on real play-by-play guys like Ian Eagle and Sean Grande so this never happens again. We’ll all chip in. I promise you.